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    Présentez les changements dans votre MédiaSPIP ou les actualités de vos projets sur votre MédiaSPIP grâce à la rubrique actualités.
    Dans le thème par défaut spipeo de MédiaSPIP, les actualités sont affichées en bas de la page principale sous les éditoriaux.
    Vous pouvez personnaliser le formulaire de création d’une actualité.
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Sur d’autres sites (10313)

  • How to find the actual size occupied by an AVFrame ?

    23 septembre 2013, par jsp99

    The main task at hand is to find the actual size of a decoded AVFrame.

    Here is some background information about the problem -
    I wrote a program which takes as input a media file and displays all the video frames of the file, on the screen. My Code (written in C using SDL and ffmpeg) worked perfectly with .wmv files. When it came to .mkv files, it failed (SIGSEGV) due to the following reason :

    Example : Suppose I have a decoded frame from my video stream of file (filename.mkv) in AVFrame *pFrame. The frame has a pix_fmt (pFrame->pix_fmt) of yuv420p. It has dimensions 640 * 346. The Y-plane has it's linesize (pFrame->linesize[0]) as 672.

    I think you get the point here. When I use avpicture_get_size() to get the size of the frame, it calculates a wrong size. It takes pix_fmt, width and height as arguments. Nowhere does it consider 672 instead of 640.

    avpicture_get_size() : Calculates the size in bytes that a picture of the given width and height would occupy if stored in the given picture format.

    I got around this problem by adding some yuv420p frame specific code, which can find the size of the frame in situations like above.

    • Can someone explain why are most of the decoded frames (from video streams of most of the formats) this way ? And why is it not this way with the wmv format ?

    But if I have to find the actual size occupied by an AVFrame of another format (Eg: yuv410p), I have to write the format specific code again. Coming to the main problem,

    • How can I find the actual size occupied the decoded AVFrame (size in bytes occupied by the data of the AVFrame) ?

    • I tried using av_image_get_buffer_size(), but I couldn't understand how to use the align parameter. Can someone explain the usage of the parameter align ? Tried using many other functions in pixdesc.c, but I am missing something.

  • How to find a text overlay in video file ?

    30 avril 2019, par Sunil Kumar

    I have some video files which are Transcoded using ffmpeg, files contain text and Logos overlayed on video. As part of my test automation i used ffprobe to find the video and audio properties of file,

    ffprobe -v quiet -show_streams -show_format "sample.mp4"

    But i am unable to extract text/logo overlay details from video file, Is there any options present in ffprobe or ffmpeg or mediaInfo tools ? can someone suggest me the way to automate my case.

  • find the timestamp of a sound sample of an mp3 with linux or python

    23 juin 2020, par cardamom

    I am slowly working on a project which where it would be very useful if the computer could find where in an mp3 file a certain sample occurs. I would restrict this problem to meaning a fairly exact snippet of the audio, not just for example the chorus in a song on a different recording by the same band where it would become more some kind of machine learning problem. Am thinking if it has no noise added and comes from the same file, it should somehow be possible to locate the time at which it occurs without machine learning, just like grep can find the lines in a textfile where a word occurs.

    


    In case you don't have an mp3 lying around, can set up the problem with some music available on the net which is in the public domain, so nobody complains :

    


    curl https://web.archive.org/web/20041019004300/http://www.navyband.navy.mil/anthems/ANTHEMS/United%20Kingdom.mp3 --output godsavethequeen.mp3


    


    It's a minute long :

    


    exiftool godsavethequeen.mp3 | grep Duration
Duration                        : 0:01:03 (approx)


    


    Now cut out a bit between 30 and 33 seconds (the bit which goes la la la la..) :

    


    ffmpeg -ss 30 -to 33 -i godsavethequeen.mp3 gstq_sample.mp3


    


    both files in the folder :

    


    $ ls -la
-rw-r--r-- 1 cardamom cardamom   48736 Jun 23 00:08 gstq_sample.mp3
-rw-r--r-- 1 cardamom cardamom 1007055 Jun 22 23:57 godsavethequeen.mp3


    


    This is what am after :

    


    $ findsoundsample gstq_sample.mp3 godsavethequeen.mp3
start 30 end 33


    


    Am happy if it is a bash script or a python solution, even using some kind of python library. Sometimes if you use the wrong tool, the solution might work but look horrible, so whichever tool is more suitable. This is a one minute mp3, have not thought yet about performance just about getting it done at all, but would like some scalability, eg find ten seconds somewhere in half an hour.